Patent application for a computer motional command interface

ABSTRACT

A method and apparatus is described for interacting with electronic devices via motional commands. The method uses perturbations of the background quasistatic electric fields. The apparatus measures perturbations in electric potential relative to the background. Body movement is recognized by comparing changes in signals in time with signals collected from training sets for specified motional commands or gestures. Upon recognizing the commands, the apparatus issues the predetermined response to the motion.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

[0001] This application is to receive benefit of 60/445,548 filed Feb. 6, 2003 and 60/515844 filed Oct. 30, 2003.

STATEMENT OF FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT

[0002] Not applicable

REFERENCE SEQUENCE LISTING OR COMPUTER PROGRAM

[0003] Sequence listing is not applicable. A computer program using MATLAB language is provided to demonstrate a motional command recognition algorithm.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION—FIELD OF INVENTION

[0004] This invention relates to fields of computer peripherals and motion recognition for the control of electronic apparatus, specifically to aid in the input of commands to computerized devices, and to add artificial intelligence features to a user interface. It is related to proximity and motion sensing of a person and objects.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

[0005] The ability to communicate with a computer through peripherals has been developing for years from the punch card, CRT, DOS keyboard line commands, windows type programs using the mouse, light pens and stylists, to speech recognition. All but speech recognition systems require touch control. A speech recognition interface on the other hand is not very useful in a public setting.

[0006] It has been determined by some researchers of human communication that body language comprises as much as 80% of the message communicated between people in a conversation. Thus to improve communication between computers by making the quality of human-computer interface more humanly realistic and personal, a body language interfaces is needed.

[0007] Thus human interaction with a computer is void of personal realism for at least two reasons. One, the users does not interact with the computer like they do a human being by using body language and motional commands. Second, because the computer fails to recognize and respond according to the state of mind of the user normally indicated through body language or motional commands. Thus to improve the personal realism in communicating with a computer, a motional command interface is needed with a sensing system to recognize motional commands and body language.

[0008] Virtual reality systems detect and decipher motion by using gloves with sensors or similar approaches with sensors on the body for detecting motion. The drawback with these methods is they require a physical connection to the user making it awkward for many to use and to switch users.

[0009] Today wireless communication technology and GPS may offer possibilities but they only track the location of the device. Thus to recognize body language such as folding arms, receivers and or transmitters need to be placed over the user's body. Again such a system is complex connection of transmitter and receivers located on the user's body. Another drawback to these technologies is the method requires the process of active radio transmission that at times can interfere with communication in aircraft, medical equipment. Active transmissions uses power and reduce battery life on portable units. Active transmission is also undesirable when trying to conceal the sensor system from detection. There are at times when the RF exposure may cause health risk or concerns to individuals. Also the active transmission of RF is of concern to the regulating authorities such as the FCC to avoid excessive electrical noise. Hence, what is needed is a non-contact motional command sensing system with option to operate passively.

[0010] Other motion sensing schemes include real time video image analysis, sonar, radar, laser or infrared. Video analysis tends to lack depth perception, and only senses in two-D unless a variable focal length lens is used. The others sensing methods becomes impractical to implement a motional command language interface due to hardware cost, complexity of hookup, and required processing power. Although the later may provide 3-D imaging, the main difficulty with these technologies is beam forming is required. Hence what is needed is a simplified method of implementing a motional command interface on personal computing and electronic devices.

[0011] At times the motion sensor may require concealment by embedding it in a material while still maintaining passive features. It is true that the video analysis is a passive process, and infrared may be; but neither of said can covered by common materials such as construction material and still sense the motional command.

[0012] Computers widely used today mostly issue a command or response in the form of keyboard strokes, mouse movements and clicks, with the exception of speech recognition. Computer access speed is compromised for simple and intuitive tasks when using a mouse, keyboard or stylist to click and point. Examples are in reviewing video or information on forms and screens, one my need to push the stop, forward, or okay button with a mouse.

[0013] Additionally, repetitive movements of using mechanical peripherals often cause injury, such as running of a scroll button, or clicking to close a window. These motions all rely on some mechanical movement of a peripheral device or involve a pointing process with a pen or finger on a touch sensitive screen. Lets referrer to this method as the screen method.

[0014] In the screen method the interaction zone between the user and computers is the two-dimensional plane of the screen. This method of interfacing human commands to the computers is tedious and particularly so on small video screens as on palm-sized devices. Hence, the human interface with the computer is slow and tedious. What is needed is a faster touchless method of controlling the computer through motional command language where the commands are detected in a volume of three-dimensional space called the interaction zone as opposed to mouse movements mapped to a physical two-dimensional flat space on a computer screen.

[0015] Systems using mechanical peripheral pointing devices and the screen method also require visual interaction to operate. This is at time tedious for even simple tasks. Also this method is inconvenient for use with mobile computing device or while being mobile such as when driving a car. They are also inconvenient when the user is too distance a from the computer unit to see a mouse cursor. They are also not applicable when the user is walking into a room and wishes to use hand signals to issue a commands to turn on and adjust the lighting. Another example is when the user is lounging in a chair in front of the TV and the remote control is elsewhere. In this case if a motional command systems were installed to have the interaction zone at the location of the person in the chair, the user could issue a motion of the hand to change the TV channel or fast rewind a DVD. Thus what is needed is a motional command language system self-contained in a computer video display unit, and with options to have a remote-sensing units distributed throughout the home or convenient locations.

[0016] In summary our sensing system requirements are, to make computer-human more natural, peripheral control devices need to be self-contained or embedded into the computer or in objects where the computer is to be controlled from, be touchless, non-contact, offers passive wireless technology capability, operate in a three dimensional interactive zone, remove tedium of visual screen inspection, and senses and respond to motional commands of the user, and ultimately body language.

[0017] No known prior art addresses all the above sensing system requirements for a motional command system.

[0018] In this invention uses sensors to detect electric fields by measuring the electrical potential in space. An electric potential measurement is done with a high input impedance electrode so the circuit attached to it does not alter the potential under measurement. The frequency is so low the fields are almost static or quasistatic, and therefore obey the principles of electrostatics. These type of fields are called E-fields.

[0019] The prior art by Neil Gershenfeld and Joshua R. Smith in U.S. Pat. No. 6,051,981 uses electric field sources created by a transmitter with a different sensing method. They also disclosed a gesture wall, and a Phish as a mouse controller. Their sensing method measures currents from a transmitter and into receiving sensors. Their sensors electrodes are effectively at earth ground electric potential. This fact causes the receive sensors to distort the electric potential distribution in space simply by their presence. Plus there is not a passive option, since the currents need measured from the transmitter. Other prior art referenced in their patent seem to not to have the capability or recognize value of operating passively.

[0020] Beaty discloses in on the Internet in 2000, a discrete FET circuit and an operational amplifier circuit to detect electric fields signals from static electric charge. The amplifier produces a signal with strength indicative of proximity to static charge only. The disclosed is directed toward detecting static charged objects. No motional command system is mentioned. Also nothing is said about detecting uncharged objects.

[0021] Other capacitive type proximity sensors using AC frequency shift due to changes in oscillator capacitance have been recognizes around the time of the advent of radio circuits. These methods suffer from low input impedance, and consequently lack range, and alter the background field by the antenna. This occurs because a resonant tank circuit is used. They also require an oscillator attached to an antenna, so it is really an active method.

[0022] The inventor is not aware of prior art found passively using the AC 50 Hz-60 Hz part of the electromagnetic spectrum with a high input impedance device. In fact, most low frequency electronic devices designers struggle to filter out the energy in this frequency band.

BACKGROUND OF INVENTION—OBJECTS AND ADVANTAGES

[0023] The lower the frequency of the electric fields, the more a quasistatic the electric fields become such that:

[0024] a) objects except conductors appear as high impedance electrical loads thus do not distort the electric field much, i.e, are essential transparent;

[0025] b) even slightly conductive objects having contact with earth ground have a substantially lower impedance than nonconductors in contact with ground;

[0026] c) electrostatic principles apply;

[0027] d) the electric fields penetrate deeply through objects.

[0028] Gershenfeld et. al.disclosures state 100 kHz as an operating frequency. Also demonstrated devices, as recalled, operated at frequencies of around 0.5 MHz. At these frequencies, the objects in vicinity of the body being detected are more so conductive than at frequencies below 1 kHz. Thus distortion may occur and contribute to nonlinearities.

[0029] Gershenfeld does state his method requires the solution of nonlinear equations. Also the solutions are degenerate, i.e., not unique defined. Also, his method of using electrodes at ground potential also requires measurement of current from a transmitter. Their measurement of current from the transmitter is to determine the total amount of current that could be detected in the sensors. If objects of low electrical potential are near, they will distort the potential field and affect the measurement accuracy by reducing current arriving at the receive electrodes.

[0030] The present invention uses receivers with high input impedance so as not to draw currents or distort the field. Also, in the passive mode, the frequencies of operation are that of or near the electrical power line frequency and are surely quasistatic. These frequencies are extremely low, and substantially reduce the conductivity of objects near to the sensor. Thus preventing field distortions.

[0031] With further amplification circuitry not show, we found in the passive case, the sensitivity of the 60 Hz A.C. amplitude was found to depend linearly after taking the logarithm of the response. The sensitivity was detected to a range of about 40 inches. This range is sufficient to have good motional command zone defined in front of a computer monitor, or other device and appliances.

[0032] It is one aspect of this invention to make computers and robots more human-like by increasing the personal realism of interacting with these devices through a motional command system (MCS) that offers a friendly and efficient means of interfacing the user's motional commands and body language with the computer.

[0033] It is another aspect of the invention to provide a personal computer interface that responds more efficiently with less tedium than using pointing device peripherals.

[0034] It is another aspect of the invention to allow the user of the MCS to interact more naturally, and be more mobile and active will interacting with a computer.

[0035] It is another aspect of this invention to make a touchless motional command system (MCS).

[0036] It is another aspect of the invention to provide a method for processing MCS data so the computer can recognize and respond to motional commands and body language of the user with or without additional modalities.

[0037] Another aspect of the invention is to make as sensing system for the said MCS.

[0038] It is another aspect of this invention to provide the computer with visual display or other device having a video display unit have a self-contained motional command system (MCS) that includes sensor system, electronic hardware, and software.

[0039] It is another aspect of the invention to provide a MCS with remotely locatable sensing system as a peripheral for receiving motional commands.

[0040] It is another aspect of the invention to provide a method for defining commands for recognition, and dispatching of computer responses as a result of the recognition, so the computer is trained to recognizes and responds to the motional commands of the user.

[0041] Another aspect of the invention is to provide a passive method to detect motional commands issued to the computer.

[0042] Another aspect of the invention is to provide a passive method to detect a body's presence and motion.

[0043] Yet another aspect of the invention is provide a method for processing MCS body language commands whereby the computer can recognize moods and emotions or matters of urgency of the user and thus responds with helpful processes and gives a personality to a computer.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

[0044] The invention will be better understood upon reading the following Detailed Description while referencing the provided drawings.

[0045]FIG. 1 shows a schematic for the Motional Command Sensor amplifier.

[0046]FIG. 2 shows the Thevenin equivalent circuit for the antenna with effect of adding capacitance C_(opt) that occurs when the user's motional-command surface is near antenna. This model shows the source voltage into the amplifier is reduced as the motional command surface approaches the antenna, hence the sensitivity of the amplifier is decreased. Model predicts from observed measurements that C_(opt)={fraction (1/9)} C_(ant). The high input impedance of the TL082 makes the voltage input sensitive to changes in source impedance. This amounts to sensitivity to small changes in capacitance at low frequencies such as the A.C. line frequency of 60 Hz.

[0047]FIG. 3—Shows preferred embodiment of Motion Command System on a video monitor. Six MCS sensors either are used in single ended mode relative combined in a differential amplifier to measure difference with respect to reference sensor 7. Alternatively, sensors 1 through 6 have a reference electrode along with the main antenna, so that two buffer stages like those in FIG. 1 are combined with a differential amplifier, and then driven with the filter and amplifier.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION—PREFERRED EMBODIMENT

[0048] To those skilled in of electronics will recognize the variation of the technology.

[0049] The local background noise characteristic of the A.C. line and computer signals are detected and modulated by the presence of the user's command surface in the vicinity of the motional command system (MCS) sensors. Here the command surface is referred to as the hand or body part issuing the motional command.

[0050]FIG. 1 describes the sensor as consisting of a small 4 in. long antenna with an amplifier assembled on a solderless breadboard. The input stage is a buffer amplifier with high input impedance, followed by a low pass filter and then an amplification stage.

[0051] At the low frequency of 50-60 Hz of the A.C. line, the antenna acts as an equivalent electric source in series with a capacitor represented in FIG. 1 as C_(ant). To understand this model, we recall that the conductor is an equipotential surface maintained at a potential determined from the background electric fields. Now consider the case when the user's body is held at a constant electric potential such as the case when the user is grounded or held an electric potential by a voltage source. By moving the user's hand or command control surface, toward the antenna, charge on the antenna rearranges itself. This polarization of charge on the antenna and surrounding objects is necessary to assure the electric potential is maintained on each object.

[0052] The above effect is very well known and is published for the case of an electrostatic source. It is commonly recognized when a static electricity source is moved in the vicinity of a high input impedance amplifier. The problem is a static electricity source is needed. Thus this phenomenon is not the preferred sensing method in the embodiment of this invention.

[0053] Instead, what is invented is a motional command system that uses the electric polarization phenomenon as a means to modulate the sensor's sensitivity to a characteristic background source. The physics of the process used in this disclosure is one involving scattering field theory rather than source field theory like that for the electrostatic source. The motional commands are also discernable from DC offsets produced by electrostatic sources source such as lightning, or static buildup on the user or surroundings. The method of detection and signal processing method is now described for building a computerized motional command and body language interface.

[0054] A new feature in this invention is the deliberate use of the background noise characteristics to detection motional commands and body language. In this case, the motional commands modulate the sensitivity of the sensor to the characteristic A.C. background. In this case, the induced polarization charge on the antenna is caused by a spatial change in the electrical potential conditions. The electrical potential in the spatial dimension satisfies Laplace's equation. Doing so dictates the presence of the polarization charge on the antenna and the surrounding objects.

[0055]FIG. 2 shows a model of the amplitude reduction using a voltage divider. The capacitance C_(opt) occurs between the person's hand or body in proximity to the sensor, and the sensor. Since the antenna is small compared to wavelength, the antenna is not resonant, and the source impedance of the antenna is that of a capacitor. The capacitance depends upon the antenna geometry and its position relative to the surrounding objects. In the absence of the presence of the MCS user, i.e. beyond the range of the sensor, the capacitance C_(ant) is a small value probably having a stray capacitance of about 5-30 pF. Thus the antenna is a high impedance source at 50-60 Hz of order 10⁹ Ohms. The parallel input resistor of 2.5 Megaohm reduces the antenna input impedance to this value causes some filtering and allows bias currents to flow. However, the amplifier is still very sensitive to the voltage across its input because the TL082 has an input of 10¹² Ohms.

[0056] When the MCS user is held at an electrical potential such as ground, and the user's command surface such as his or her hand is placed within the interaction zone of the MCS, additional polarization occurs to the charge on the antenna. This is equivalent to an additional capacitance forming between the antenna and ground. This capacitance is represented in FIG. 1 as C_(opt). It is noted that the user is typically held at ground potential to see the effect of the C_(opt) best; but it is at times convenient to modulate the user's electrical potential between ground potential and another so as to encode the modulation of the characteristic background. Hence command signals and body language from multiple users of the MCS could be coded and decoded so at to avoid interference. There are several methods or means to doing this. One is to naturally rely the electrically conductive property of the shoes. Another is to have the person touch a ground electrode or a modulated grounded electrode while giving the motional command.

[0057] The effect of the presence of C_(opt) is to reduce the sensitivity of the amplifier. Such reduction results in a noticeable amplitude modulation of the characteristic background noise waveform produced at the output of the MCS sensor in FIG. 1.

[0058] The capacitance C_(opt) is expected to behave as some inverse power to distance of separation between the antenna and the user's command surface. Also, it is expected to be proportional to the area of the antenna in the direction of the vector connecting the antenna center and user's command surface. It is also proportional to the command surface area.

[0059] For the circuit shown in FIG. 1, built on a prototyping board, a sensitivity of about 18 inches from the antenna was observable on an analog oscilloscope. The location was at the breakfast table of a newly constructed home. The setup uses a TL082 Texas Instrument JFET OP amp. The amplitude decreases as the user's hand approached the antenna that is a 4 inch piece of number 22 solid copper wire with insulation. This is in agreement with the model and the fact that capacitance appears inversely proportional to distance over this range of distances. The change in voltage is about 10% of 250 mV peak-to-peak signal. If the user is grounded through the ground wire in the electrical wiring the observed output signal from the cicuit in FIG. 1 increased to 2.5 V peak to peak. Again the change in amplitude as the hand approached the sensor antenna is about 10%. Also, the signal is optionally frequency modulated by placing a resistor about 10 kOhm and a switch between the user and the common of the amplifier. Such a method may be used to make unique identification of issues of motional commands.

[0060] The sensitivity of the circuit to user motion is in part due to the high voltage sensitivity occurring from high input impedance of the buffer amplifier, and in part due to the filtering. The high frequency noise is removed by the low pass filter appearing before the gain stage shown in FIG. 1. The input circuitry to the buffer stage acts as a high pass filter. In fact, the output of signal level of the buffer stage is about 5 mV peak to peak for the particular level of 60 Hz AC background. Additionally, the final gain stage in this embodiment has a gain of about 50.

[0061] The resistor parallel to the amplifier input is used to cause some high pass filtering and to prevent the amplification stage from saturating by adjusting input level to the gain stage and by providing a return path for the amplification stage.

[0062] A variable resistor voltage-divider is also alternatively used as a to adjust the sensitivity by limiting the input into the low pass filter prior to the final amplification stage. The overall sensitivity to both the characteristic background and the modulation due to motional commands is also achieved by placing a capacitance in parallel with the shunt resistor R1 in FIG. 1.

[0063] Since the modulation is only 10% of the characteristic signal amplitude, a differential amplifier is easily placed between to MCS sensors of FIG. 1. Preferably to antennas would drive two buffer stages like that in FIG. 1; but immediately afterwards a differential amplifier such as the Burr Brown LM105 would be used. The output of the amplifier would then go to the low pass filter and the final amplifier stage like that in FIG. 1.

[0064] The particular values of components used, and the measured voltages depend upon depend upon the features of the characteristic signal used as input to detect the modulation due to capacitance changes between the antenna and the user. It is clear to anyone working in the art that the exact output level and sensitivity of the motion command system sensor shown in FIG. 1, depends upon the users environment. Such variables are the ambient characteristic noise level input to the buffer amplifier and the frequency thereof, the antenna and input impedance characteristics of the amplifier, and the electrical potential, electrical conductive properties, and the size of the user control surface. Those skilled in the art of electronics are able to modify and or make adjustable circuit parameters and physical properties of the system to have a MCS sensor to be tunable to operate in the users environment. But none-the-less the principle of operation is the sensitivity of the amplifier to the characteristic background noise is modified by the presence of the users command surface within the interaction zone of the sensor.

[0065] The motional commands system is sensitive to motional commands having duration of 0.5-3 second. The preferred embodiment of the MCS is in a computer or video display unit. FIG. 3 indicates the placing of sensors on the sides edges of a CRT computer monitor makes an array of MCS sensors. The sensors may be placed inside the monitor housing. Sensor sensors are placed to the left and right, top and bottom, and front and back of CRT monitor display area. The antennas of the sensors are oriented vertical direction on the right and left sides, horizontal on the top and bottom, and horizontal to the screen on the front and back. To make the positions of the sensor clear, FIG. 2 shows the layout.

[0066] The sensors work in pairs. The sensors on the right and left side are used to sense motion along the horizontal axis while the sensors on the top and bottom are used to sense motion along the vertical axis. The sensor pair on the front and back are used to sense motion along the axial axis perpendicular to the face of the screen.

[0067] Each sensor in the array sends a voltage signals to a data collection system that can process the signals. Such a system can be a stand-alone computer processor such as a DSP and analog to digital (A/D) converter, and support electronic hardware, or it can be the computer device the user is interfacing to with the MCS supplemented by some support electronic hardware. We refer here to the support electronic hardware including the A/D, control circuitry, and supplemental signal conditioning as the MCS support-ware.

[0068] In the preferred embodiment, the sensor signals are run into a differential amplifier so as to subtract out the background noise level. This may be done in hardware or software. The signals are digitally recorded by the computer soundcard. The sound card sampled at an appropriate rate to preserve quality. Prior to entering the soundcard, some hardware is used to multiplex the analog signals from the six MCS sensors and amplify the signals if necessary. Thus the data from each sensor is sampled at 8 kHz if 48 kHz sampling rate is used on the sound card. Other sampling rates are off course possible. Additional amplification is also used to make the maximum input to the line of about 2.0 V peak to peak. An automatic gain control circuit is easily implemented. This amplifier comes after the MUX in the signal stream. Additionally, there are voltage comparators placed on the output of each sensor. Other triggering schemes are easily envisioned, such as by nearly real time software I/O.

[0069] The interaction zone is defined as the volume of space where the motional commands are processed. The focal point is defined where as the origin in space where the motional commands will be issued. In the preferred embodiment, this is in front of the computer monitor a distance of about the separation between the horizontal pair of MCS sensors. At this point the user places their command control surface such as their hand. The MCS is activated and calibration data is collected by the data acquisition system. The data is used to scale the signals so the difference between signals from the pair of sensors is zero at the focal point.

[0070] Next the user defines motional commands. By activating the command recorder software program, the sensor data is collected while the user issues the desired command to be recorded. This process is done several times to establish statistics and a database of commands. The signals from the sensor are used as training data for the MCS processing software. Commands to be issued by the computer as also assigned during the training period. Triggering threshold levels and logic are also determined during this process.

[0071] Next an MCS command is issued. The sensors begin collecting data for a set duration of 0.2-3 seconds when the analog trigger level is exceeded. This happens upon motion of the user control surface about the interaction zone focal point. Based upon the signal processing of the training data, the trigger levels are determined and set automatically in the MCS support-ware by MCS software. Next the computer processor runs a digital processing algorithm and decides whether a command that was programmed is recognized. If so, the system responds with appropriately programmed action.

[0072] The digital processing command recognition algorithm extracts the envelope of the signals from the MCS sensors. Applies a calibration base on the focal point calibration. Then normalizes the data to maximum value of unity. From this cross correlations are computed between each channel of the training data and the channel data of the recorded acquisition. From the results correlation coefficients are obtained between the recorded command channel data and the training data. Commands are recognized by correlation values exceeding threshold values set on the correlation coefficients. The thresholds are set on six correlation coefficients for each channel, the autocorrelation, and five cross correlation coefficients.

[0073] The preferred embodiment is the most advanced application, and the number of sensors can change and be as few as one. For A.C. operation as describe the person or body is preferably grounded or connected to a switched grounded connection. For D.C. signals are recognized well when the person or body is not grounded. They appear well an increase in potential followed by a negative tail when the A.C. signal is filtered to remove the A.C. component of the line frequency. There are also intermediate states of conductivity between the body and the ground that result in a mixture both A.C. and D.C. components in the signal. The extent depends upon the filtering chosen and the gain of the subsequent stages of amplification, not shown of FIG. 1. Also, transient fields from charge polarization where potentials from muscle flexing can generate charge polarization that are possibly detected as the hand extends quickly to and fro the sensor.

[0074] Also the invention covers variations in implementation including hardware and software. The sensors can be implemented to detect DC offset caused by ungrounded bodies. The DC is seen more readily when the signal is low passed filtered and amplified. An ungrounded individual moving their hand passed the sensor is detected by recognizing the DC offset. This may only be a transient response, but being useful it is also covered in this invention for certain application of controlling devices such as toys. Otherwise the DC component shows up as a DC offset occur on the AC signal. Depending upon the degree of further amplification, it may be difficult to remove when caused by a transient sources such as passing the hand passed the sensor. Thus at times the DC component is indicative of proximity and useful in devices.

[0075] The invention may be used to detect a body's presence or the motion, such as an individual by either the D.C. shift, or A.C. amplitude reduction, and in some cases both phenomena.

[0076] The application of the invention applies to the sensing method, and is useful to make toys that producing music, lights, and motion of some object, triggered or controlled by the signal detected by the said sensors. In particular, a baby mobile, or a toy similar to the popular “Musini” by NeuroSmith, a toy that plays music as the children jump. Both these devices, and others, can benefit from the E-field sensor technology described in this invention. Also doors could be opened closed easily by hand motion. Also, the a person can also be detected by sensing through a door to notify as a door bell, or warn if someone is coming through the door. 

1. A method for sensing motion of a body using quasistatic electric potential measurements consisting of: a. at least one sensor capable of detecting said quasistatic electric potential perturbations relative to the background electric potential caused from the presence or motion of a body in proximity to sensor; b. a least one motional command perturbing the said electric potential; c. a means electronically conditioning and acquiring the signal data from the at least one sensor, or a plurality thereof, in time; d. a means processing the acquired data to produce a signal indicative of a body's motion of its presence; e. a means of recognizing the said signal associated with body's motion or its presence; f. a means of maintaining or modulating the electrical conductivity of the body such that the A.C. amplitude changes in a fairly predictable way with changes in relative proximity between the said sensor and body; g. a means of dispatching a command to an electronic device upon recognition;
 2. An apparatus using the method in claim 1 when used to sense motion of a body through walls, ceilings, doors, and containers;
 3. An apparatus using the method in claim 1 used to communicate motional commands to a device using perturbations in the A.C. background potential;
 4. An apparatus using the method in claim 1 used to communication motional commands to a device using perturbation in the D.C. background potential;
 5. An apparatus using the method in claim 1 communicating motional commands to a device using perturbations in both the D.C. and A.C. signal components;
 6. An apparatus as in claim 1 used to detect the D.C., A.C., or combination of both signal components of inanimate objects including a machine and matter;
 7. An apparatus as in claim 1 used to detect the D.C., A.C., or combination of both signal components of a animate objects including people, and animals, and fish, and insects;
 8. An apparatus using method of claim 1 in a toys;
 9. An apparatus using method in claim 1 used to communicate motional commands to a device by recognizing perturbations in the background signal originating from the A.C. power wiring or equipment;
 10. An apparatus using method in claim 1 used to communicate motional commands to a device by recognizing perturbations in the background signal originating from static field transmitter or and A.C. transmitter;
 11. An apparatus as in claim 1 consisting of: a. a high input impedance amplifier with low frequency response to signals about 4 Hz while still having sensitivity to the background A.C. signal; b. a means for filtering the pass band signals from said amplifier in part a to extract the A.C. and D.C. part;
 12. An apparatus using method in claim 11 used to communicate motional commands to a device using perturbations in the A.C. background potential and consisting of: a. an array of said sensors on a viewing monitor with at least 2 sensors forming a pair and having a component of the vector joining them in the direction of motion sensed;
 13. An apparatus using the method in claim 12 as a part of a portable computing device;
 14. An apparatus using the method in claim 12 as a part of a device for viewing pictures and videos;
 15. An apparatus using the method in claim 12 as a part of a computer monitor device;
 16. An apparatus using the method in claim 12 as a part of a computer keyboard device;
 17. An apparatus using the method in claim 12 as a part of baby mobile toy;
 18. An apparatus using the method in claim 12 as a part of;
 19. An apparatus using method in claim 12 where the means for modulation is a switch in a shoe;
 20. An apparatus using method in claim 12 used to detect fish; 